Quote:
Originally Posted by Mike O'C
Very nice Mauro. Many years ago (early 1970's) I bought a plant from a dealer in Brazil (Lotus Osiris I think it was called) and it was labelled as Bifrenaria harrisoniae (may have the spellignwrong) and the flowers (from memory) look a bit like your photos. I checked my plant out (when it first bloomed) against the paintings in one of the volumes of Heihne's Orchidaceae of Brasil and I think also in his Iconogrpahia do Orchidaceae do Brasil. What is the difference between the two species? Obviously one must have a long spur
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Hi Mike,
First, let me say that Hoehne, recognising that the long spur in some flowers of Bifrenaria tyrianthina had enough taxonimic relevance described a variety he called Bifrenaria tyrianthina var. magnicalcarata. Later, Guido Pabst assumed that this characteristic was stable and spread enough to justify lifting the variety to the status of species, thus describing Bifrenaria magnicalcarata.
So, Bifrenaria magnicalcarata would have in the long calcar its main difference when compared to Bifrenaria tyrianthina and especially with Bifrenaria harrisoniae. Another difference is that in Bifrenaria magnicalcarata the inflorescence is sometimes higher than the leaves, but this never happens in Bif. harrisoniae.
More recently (2003) Campacci made a review of the genus. In his review he says that not only Hohene was wrong in considering the flowers with long spur a variety, but Pabst too in lifting the Hoehne's variety to the status of a new species. He says that both Hoehne and Pabst had actually Bif. tyrianthina in hands and just made some confusion. He sustains that the long spur is a characteristic of Bif. tyrianthina and by consequence B. tyrianthina var. magnicalcarata Hoehne and Bif. magnicalcarata (Hoehne) Pabst are synonyms to Bif tyrianthina. In any case, the main difference between tyrianthina and harrisoniae continue to be the long spur basically.